A range‐wide postglacial history of Swiss stone pine based on molecular markers and palaeoecological evidence

Author:

Gugerli Felix1ORCID,Brodbeck Sabine1ORCID,Lendvay Bertalan1ORCID,Dauphin Benjamin1ORCID,Bagnoli Francesca2ORCID,van der Knaap Willem O.3,Tinner Willy3ORCID,Höhn Maria4ORCID,Vendramin Giovanni G.2ORCID,Morales‐Molino César35ORCID,Schwörer Christoph3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland

2. National Research Council, Institute of Biosciences and BioResources Sesto Fiorentino Italy

3. Institute of Plant Sciences and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern Switzerland

4. Szent István University Budapest Hungary

5. Grupo de Ecología y Restauración Forestal (FORECO), Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida, Facultad de Ciencias Universidad de Alcalá Alcalá de Henares Spain

Abstract

AbstractAimKnowing a species' response to historical climate shifts helps understanding its perspectives under global warming. We infer the hitherto unresolved postglacial history of Pinus cembra. Using independent evidence from genetic structure and demographic inference of extant populations, and from palaeoecological findings, we derive putative refugia and re‐colonisation routes.LocationEuropean Alps and Carpathians.Taxa Pinus cembra. MethodsWe genotyped nuclear and chloroplast microsatellite markers in nearly 3000 individuals from 147 locations across the entire natural range of P. cembra. Spatial genetic structure (Bayesian modelling) and demographic history (approximate Bayesian computation) were combined with palaeobotanical records (pollen, macrofossils) to infer putative refugial areas during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and re‐colonisation of the current range.ResultsWe found distinct spatial genetic structure, despite low genetic differentiation even between the two disjunct mountain ranges. Nuclear markers revealed five genetic clusters aligned East–West across the range, while chloroplast haplotype distribution suggested nine clusters. Spatially congruent separation at both marker types highlighted two main genetic lineages in the East and West of the range. Demographic inference supported early separation of these lineages dating back to a previous interstadial or interglacial c. 210,000 years ago. Differentiation into five biologically meaningful genetic clusters likely established during postglacial re‐colonisation.Main ConclusionsCombining genetic and palaeoecological evidence suggests that P. cembra primarily survived the LGM in ‘cold period’ refugia south of the Central European Alps and near the Carpathians, from where it expanded during the Late Glacial into its current Holocene ‘warm period’ refugia. This colonisation history has led to the distinct East–West structure of five genetic clusters. The two main genetic lineages likely derived from ancient divergence during an interglacial or interstadial. The respective contact zone (Brenner line) matches a main biogeographical break in the European Alps also found in herbaceous alpine plant species.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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